Category Archives: Mpumalanga Province

Our experiences in the reserves of Mpumalanga, South Africa

Summer Snapshots from Kruger: Christmas leftovers for a Leopard

DeWetsWild conducted a two-week tour of the Kruger National Park with altogether nine people to see out 2025 and ring in 2026 and every day for the month of February I’ll be sharing just a few of the many memories our group collected.

Early evening on Christmas Day, returning to camp after our afternoon drive, we found a Leopard up a marula tree virtually on Satara’s fenceline. The Leopard stashed the remains of an impala carcass there to enjoy later, but being so close to the camp there was a throng of tourists gawking at it and it quickly decided to wait a little longer to feast on the leftovers.

If you’d like to join me on a guided tour of South Africa’s wild places, of even if you’d just like a bit of help putting your reservations together, don’t hesitate to reach out!

Summer Snapshots from Kruger: Lions for Christmas

DeWetsWild conducted a two-week tour of the Kruger National Park with altogether nine people to see out 2025 and ring in 2026 and every day for the month of February I’ll be sharing just a few of the many memories our group collected.

On Christmas morning we were treated to this very special encounter with a beautiful pride of lions within shouting distance of Nwanedzi Picnic Site.

If you’d like to join me on a guided tour of South Africa’s wild places, of even if you’d just like a bit of help putting your reservations together, don’t hesitate to reach out!

Summer Snapshots from Kruger: Cheetah Concerns

DeWetsWild conducted a two-week tour of the Kruger National Park with altogether nine people to see out 2025 and ring in 2026 and every day for the month of February I’ll be sharing just a few of the many memories our group collected.

One very hot afternoon we were nearing Muzandzeni Picnic Spot when we came across an obviously distressed female Cheetah, calling non-stop as she walked. Other visitors at the scene informed us that she was separated from her cub when the pair came across a troop of baboons. Great was our relief when the cub appeared in the road ahead and the two Cheetahs were reunited.

If you’d like to join me on a guided tour of South Africa’s wild places, of even if you’d just like a bit of help putting your reservations together, don’t hesitate to reach out!

 

Summer Snapshots from Kruger: Who’d think that a Leopard sighting could get even more exciting!?

DeWetsWild conducted a two-week tour of the Kruger National Park with altogether nine people to see out 2025 and ring in 2026 and every day for the month of February I’ll be sharing just a few of the many memories our group collected.

We found a Leopard up a tree with the scraps of an impala kill near Tshokwane Picnic Site one morning. Leopards are always a prize sighting and, being on one of the roads less in that part of the Park, we could enjoy the sight of the large cat lying lazily on a thick Marula branch to our hearts’ content.

Suddenly a herd of Impala came dashing from the other side of the road, heading straight to the tree in which the Leopard was. The Leopard immediately jumped up and moved down the tree, being ever the opportunist on the lookout for an easy kill. Our attention however was caught by the sight of a massive female Spotted Hyena (radio-collared as part of a research project) chasing after a newly born Impala lamb at an amazing speed. We had only a split-second glimpse of the chase but it was clear the hyena would be the victor.

With hyena and impalas vacating the scene in a flash our attention could return to the Leopard surveying the landscape from its elevate perch, having never jumped to the ground in the chaos.

If you’d like to join me on a guided tour of South Africa’s wild places, of even if you’d just like a bit of help putting your reservations together, don’t hesitate to reach out!

Summer Snapshots from Kruger: Buffalo on the alert

DeWetsWild conducted a two-week tour of the Kruger National Park with altogether nine people to see out 2025 and ring in 2026 and every day for the month of February I’ll be sharing just a few of the many memories our group collected.

We didn’t get to see many buffalo during the trip, despite them being among the mammals with the highest population in the Park. This was probably as a result of the good rainfall the Park was receiving, leading to a flush of green grass and easily accessible water in areas well away from the tourist roads. It was actually during a downpour that we found a small herd just south of Satara. One of the cows in the group was noticeably nervous and on high alert, and while we never could figure out why she was so highly strung it was clear she wasn’t to be messed with!

If you’d like to join me on a guided tour of South Africa’s wild places, of even if you’d just like a bit of help putting your reservations together, don’t hesitate to reach out!

Summer Snapshots from Kruger: Thunderstorm Loading

DeWetsWild conducted a two-week tour of the Kruger National Park with altogether nine people to see out 2025 and ring in 2026 and every day for the month of February I’ll be sharing just a few of the many memories our group collected.

December heralded one of the wettest summer seasons on record in the Kruger National Park and surrounding Lowveld (and it isn’t over yet!), which culminated in extensive flooding and severe damage to infrastructure and even loss of human life in the towns around the Park by the middle of January. This image is of a particularly terrifying thunderstorm we witnessed developing and then unleashing its fury on the plains east of Satara.

If you’d like to join me on a guided tour of South Africa’s wild places, of even if you’d just like a bit of help putting your reservations together, don’t hesitate to reach out!

Summer Snapshots from Kruger: The thrill of finding lions on the road!

DeWetsWild conducted a two-week tour of the Kruger National Park with altogether nine people to see out 2025 and ring in 2026 and every day for the month of February I’ll be sharing just a few of the many memories our group collected.

The central reaches of the Kruger National Park is lion country. On our first morning of the trip, taking an easy drive from Tamboti to Satara, we had no less than 4 lion sightings – two of them right on the road. The first of these was of two magnificent males lazily patrolling their territory along the Timbavati River, while the second was of a mating threesome – two males and a female – at the Nsemani Dam.

If you’d like to join me on a guided tour of South Africa’s wild places, of even if you’d just like a bit of help putting your reservations together, don’t hesitate to reach out!

Summer Snapshots from Kruger: An assassin caught in the act

DeWetsWild conducted a two-week tour of the Kruger National Park with altogether nine people to see out 2025 and ring in 2026 and every day for the month of February I’ll be sharing just a few of the many memories our group collected.

One of the things I love to do with my guests in the evenings is to take a walk through our camp looking for nocturnal wildlife. On one occasion we were strolling through Tamboti Tented Camp when we came across an Assassin Bug attacking a rather large Millipede. Now matter how much the millipede squirmed, trying to wriggle and writhe the assassin bug off its body, this was a fight it was not going to win… We watched as the assassin stabbed its prey with its proboscis (modified mouth parts), injecting its victim with saliva that is a concoction of toxins and digestive enzymes which eventually kills the millipede and liquifies its insides, allowing the assassin bug to suck its fill.

If you’d like to join me on a guided tour of South Africa’s wild places, of even if you’d just like a bit of help putting your reservations together, don’t hesitate to reach out!

Summer Snapshots from Kruger: The Sound of Summer

DeWetsWild conducted a two-week tour of the Kruger National Park with altogether nine people to see out 2025 and ring in 2026 and every day for the month of February I’ll be sharing just a few of the many memories our group collected.

Now, if there’s one bird who’s song can be considered to be the summer anthem of the Lowveld, it has to be the Woodland Kingfisher, loudly and proudly proclaiming its presence from early morning right through to the evening. I love their song so much that it is the ringtone on my phone. No matter where I am when I hear this sound my mind immediately wanders to one of our beautiful wild places and the cares of the world vanish for a while.

Have a listen here.

If you’d like to join me on a guided tour of South Africa’s wild places, of even if you’d just like a bit of help putting your reservations together, don’t hesitate to reach out!

Our 2025 in Pictures

Join us as we reminisce about some of the places DeWetsWild visited while exploring Southern Africa’s wild places in 2025!

May 2026 be a year to remember for all the best reasons. Happy New Year, everyone!

I am a fully accredited and legally registered tour guide (with all the necessary insurance, professional drivers license and first aid certification) – don’t hesitate to reach out if you’d like me to arrange a guided tour of beautiful South Africa and all her natural wonders for you as well, or even just to assist with your holiday reservations for our national parks and nature reserves throughout the country.